Word-processing Technology in Japan: Kanji and the Keyboard

Portada
Psychology Press, 2000 - 219 páginas

This book deals with a topical issue relating to the use of script in Japan, one which has the potential to reshape future script policy through the mediation of both orthographic practices and social relations. It tells the story of the impact of one of the most significant technological breakthroughs in Japan in the latter part of this century: the invention and rapid adoption of word-processing technology capable of handling Japanese script in a society where the nature of that script had previously mandated handwriting as the norm. The ramifications of this technology in both the business and personal spheres have been wide-ranging, extending from changes to business practices, work profiles, orthography and social attitudes to writing through to Japan's ability to construct a substantial presence on the Internet in recent years.

 

Índice

From Manuscript to Monitor
1
Early Days
39
Changes in Writing Habits and their
71
Some Cultural Consequences
133
1
169
Implications for International
179
2
180
16
203
References
205
33
209
Index
215
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Página 205 - Buell, E (1994). National Culture and the New Global System, Baltimore and London: John Hopkins University Press.

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